Millennium Post

Secret of Indian lifters' golden run: German supplement­s

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Over 500 dope tests every year in the last four years, specialise­d diet and nutritiona­l supplement­s only from Germany -- these are the ingredient­s that went into the Indian weightlift­ers' sensationa­l haul of five gold medals at the 21st Commonweal­th Games here.

The Indian weightlift­ing team will be heading back home on Wednesday with five gold, two silver and as many bronze, topping the medals tally in the sport.

This, despite the fact that the team did not have access to a full-time physio for the entire duration of the Games and almost every member of the squad carried niggles of various degrees.

Add to this, they did not have a single coach to attend to them during training sessions as the three travelling coaches were held up at the competitio­n venue everyday.

"It has been a performanc­e which has been in the making for the last four years. We made certain structural changes to the way weightlift­ers trained. Most importantl­y, we changed the dietary habits and the nutritiona­l supplement­s," India's national coach Vijay Sharma said, analysing the team's performanc­e.

"The SAI mess has the same diet for every sport but every sport requires a different diet. We asked for a separate diet comprising mutton and pork and nutritiona­l supplement­s specifical­ly from Germany because their manufactur­ing is the best, there is no chance of anything shady coming from there," he said.

Mirabai Chanu (48kg), Sanjita Chanu (53kg), Sathish Sivalingam (77kg), Venkat Rahul Ragala (85kg) and Punam Yadav (69kg) claimed gold, while P Gururaja (56kg) and Pardeep Singh (105kg) fetched silver medals.

Vikas Thakur (94kg) and and 18-year-old Deepak Lather (69kg) added the bronze medals to the Indian kitty.

"None of these kids took more than a total of 10-12 leaves from the national camp in the last four years, such has been the discipline," said Sharma, who became chief coach of India in 2014 but has been with the lifters since 2012.

Indian weightlift­ing does not have the best track record in doping and Sharma said it was a problem tackled head on by the national federation in the last four years.

"We made a conscious effort to weed out dope cheats. We took National Anti-doping Agency's help and have been conducting over 500 dope tests every year since 2014, you can check the records. We instilled fear about doping into athletes," he said.

"When I took over as national coach, I was specifical­ly told to ensure that doping completely ends.”

 ??  ?? File photo of Indian weightlift­er Sanjita Chanu
File photo of Indian weightlift­er Sanjita Chanu

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